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GfG 160
Practice DSA with GfG 160 - 160 DSA Problems. Includes bonus problems and videos to strengthen your DSA skills step by step. Free Career Guidance available too.
Python
Your All-in-One Learning Portal. It contains well written, well thought and well explained computer science and programming articles, quizzes and practice/competitive programming/company interview Questions.
DSA
A Computer Science portal for geeks. It contains well written, well thought and well explained computer science and programming articles, quizzes and practice/competitive programming/company interview Questions.
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GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › interview experiences › amazon-aws-interview-experience-for-cloud-support-associate-2020
Amazon AWS Interview Experience for Cloud Support Associate - GeeksforGeeks
October 6, 2024 - It was a Technical Interview involving mostly Computer Networks concepts. My interviewer was really helpful in guiding me towards the solutions for the questions whose answers I had trouble arriving at.
Discussions

A detailed interview experience at Amazon - New grad (on-site)
Hope you get it. Being an international student myself, i know it is hard. Im currently on opt doing unpaid internship and got my final interview on 22nd. I just want to get out of this cycle. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/leetcode
56
412
December 3, 2024
AWS for interview
Take the Cloud Practitioner Essentials course in Skill Builder. It's free, and gives you a good overview. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/aws
22
0
July 25, 2024
First time interviewing at AWS and freaking out
Not in that role, but recent AWS hire. Learn about STAR interviews, read about the leadership principles in the context of your STAR stories (and STAR is just a format for a story). The HR and phone screen calls are important. Dont try to BS what you don't know, be honest. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/aws
26
38
March 7, 2025
Amazon Interview 101: Comprehensive Guide for Engineering Roles
Here’s an alternative way to prepare: Light your sofa on fire, then sit on it and write a two page proposal about launching a new fire suppression system in six months. If you’re still alive at the end of the day, you’re ready for a job at Amazon. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/amazonemployees
17
34
July 26, 2025
People also ask

What is the interview process like for a Cloud Support Associate at Amazon?
Common stages of the interview process at Amazon as a Cloud Support Associate according to 180 Glassdoor interviews include:
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glassdoor.com
glassdoor.com › Interview › Amazon-Cloud-Support-Associate-Interview-Questions-EI_IE6036.0,6_KO7,30.htm
Amazon Cloud Support Associate Interview Experience & Questions ...
Where can I find Amazon Web Services interview experiences by job title?
Software Engineer (833); Solutions Architect (481); Software Development Engineer (SDE) (454); Cloud Support Engineer (389); Software Development Engineer (325); Account Manager (290); Program Manager (190); Cloud Support Associate (181); Data Center Technician (170); Cloud Support Engineer I (157); Software Development Engineer (SDE) II (142); Senior Solutions Architect (138); Cloud Support Engineer II (125); Cloud Engineer (124); Account Executive (114)
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glassdoor.com
glassdoor.com › interviews › amazon web services interviews
Amazon Web Services Interview Experience & Questions (2026) | ...
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GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › cloud computing › aws-interview-questions
50+ AWS Interview Questions and Answers (2025) - GeeksforGeeks
October 4, 2025 - Security Groups and Network Access Control Lists (NACLs) are both virtual firewalls used to control traffic within a VPC, but they operate at different levels and have distinct characteristics. Understanding their differences is fundamental to implementing a layered security strategy in AWS.
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GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › interview experiences › aws-cloud-support-associate-interview-experience
AWS Cloud Support Associate Interview Experience - GeeksforGeeks
July 12, 2025 - Brief questions related to my major project (7th semester) and related technology were asked towards the end of the interview. Other important topics for AWS Operating Systems and Troubleshooting interview: OS boot process (Win/Linux); Memory management ;Memory pages; Buffer and Caches, Basic commands; System date/time management, network time protocol; Managing Users and groups; File permissions; Managing softwares - installation, uninstallation, upgrade etc; Managing system services and background processes; Remote management of a system - SSH, RDP etc; Network protocols - FTP, HTTP (web servers), SMTP (mail server); System automation - cron, batch jobs, windows startup tasks
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GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › aws-interview-experience
AWS Interview Experience | GeeksforGeeks
March 4, 2024 - I was interviewed for Computer Scientist 1 role. I was having experience of 6.5 years in Java Backend Development at the time of the interview. There were 4 rounds in total. Round 1: (Data Structure) This round was primarily focused on Data ...
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Glassdoor
glassdoor.com › interviews › amazon web services interviews
Amazon Web Services Interview Experience & Questions (2026) | Glassdoor
March 13, 2026 - Is it hard to get hired at Amazon Web Services?Glassdoor users rated their interview experience at Amazon Web Services as 57.4% positive with a difficulty rating score of 3.45 out of 5 (where 5 is the highest level of difficulty).
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/leetcode › a detailed interview experience at amazon - new grad (on-site)
r/leetcode on Reddit: A detailed interview experience at Amazon - New grad (on-site)
December 3, 2024 -

ROUND 1 (30min LP + 30min coding + 2min questions)
The interviewer informed me that this round would consist of two parts: the first half would focus on Leadership Principles (LP), and the second half would be a coding challenge. The LP round went well, and soon, I moved on to the coding part. The problem was similar to detecting a cycle in a graph. I began by explaining my approach, thinking out loud. To my surprise, the interviewer asked me to code the entire solution first and review it later. This caught me off guard, and for a moment, I felt unsettled. When I finally started coding, my mind went blank. However, I decided to take small steps and began coding the parts I was confident about. Gradually, I managed to piece together an almost correct solution. Next, I started the dry run. After testing the code with basic cases, I was convinced it was correct. But then, the interviewer introduced a test case that was completely unexpected—and my solution failed.

At that point, I thought I had bombed the interview. Time was running out, and I was feeling the pressure. Suddenly, it struck me that removing a specific if condition would make my code handle the edge case the interviewer had mentioned.(I was considering undirected graph instead of directed graph). I quickly implemented the fix and explained my reasoning just as the time ran out. I left the interview feeling uncertain. I was able to code a working solution, but there was still a lingering doubt in my mind if I had done everything correctly. Overall the interviewer was good.

ROUND 2 (28min LP + 31min coding + 3min questions) (Probably Bar-Raiser)
This round followed immediately after the previous one, with the same format. However, this time the LP (Leadership Principles) questions were very challenging. The interviewer delved deeply into the details of each situation—so much so that, at one point, even I couldn’t remember what I had done! To prepare for the LP section, I had revisited stories from my past experiences. I didn’t want to risk creating fake stories, as I’m not good at that. The interviewer maintained a completely neutral expression throughout, which added to the stress. As if that wasn’t enough, the noise cancellation on my earbuds suddenly turned off, signalling that the battery was low. I quickly switched to speaker mode mid-conversation. At one point, the interviewer even mentioned that he couldn’t understand what I was trying to convey—another moment where I felt like I was bombing the interview.

Somehow, I managed to get through all the LP questions and finally moved on to the coding portion. By this time, I was already feeling a bit nervous. When the problem was presented, it was a bit different from any standard LeetCode problem I had seen. The question had two parts, and the interviewer instructed me to solve the first part first. I tackled it, did a dry run, and explained why it could be represented as a recursion problem.

With 10 minutes left on the clock, the interviewer asked me to solve the more complex part of the problem. It took me a few moments to come up with a solution. While thinking aloud, I explained my thought process to the interviewer. After some back-and-forth discussion, I finally arrived at the correct solution and performed a quick dry run—with just one minute to spare! The interviewer seemed satisfied with my solution.

At the end of the interview, I asked about their work. For the first time, I saw him smiling. I also asked a specific question about one of the AWS services, which led to good discussion for next 5 minutes. I think I nailed the technical part in this one. Overall, the interviewer seemed to be very experienced and he could put anyone in stress during interview.

ROUND 3 (18min LP + 40min Coding + 3min questions)
By this time, I was feeling nervous but still confident as last technical was good. Next interviewer was very friendly. He actually eased all the stress I had from the previous round. The LP (Leadership Principles) part was relatively straightforward and took about 18 minutes to complete. He seem to have like some of the experience I shared.

This was the Low-Level Design (LLD) round for the coding part, and the question I received was very similar to design a Hotel Management System or LRU cache with two specific methods to implement(add and remove). I asked few questions to get idea of how much complexity I need to handle. I started with a naive approach, using a list for the implementation. Then, I explained how adding a cache (using a hashmap) could reduce the remove operation's time complexity to O(1).

Gradually, I refined the solution to achieve O(1) complexity for both required features by incorporating a Doubly Linked List. At this stage, I had implemented only the necessary classes, planning to add methods as needed. I was writing code in python so for every class I would write pass keyword. Sometimes I add a class I would need but immediately decide to remove it. Basically, I was talking to myself out loud. I also justified my choice for eg why Doubly Linked List over a Singly Linked List.

While coding, I mentioned alternative approaches I might consider in the future. The interview initially told me to keep the design simple, but still seem to like that I am thinking it from reusability and scalability perspective. For instance, designing these classes in a way that they wouldn't depend on any specific data structure by applying strategy design pattern. Although I didn’t implement this during the interview, I thoroughly explained the idea.

When I finished, the interviewer remarked that my explanation and design choices was quite good. Finally, when asked if I had any questions, I inquired about the work he is doing at Amazon. Overall, the interview was very friendly. It felt like it was discussion rather than an interview.

FINAL THOUGHTS
I’m currently waiting for the results. In my opinion, the interview went well, apart from a few hiccups. I promise to share more about my background and how I prepared for the interview(I have did months of grinding). I won’t be sharing the exact questions due to their policy against doing so(I don't want to risk it, this is very few option I have). However, I can say that the questions were fairly standard. I feel lucky not to have any twisted questions in LP and for coding. 

My final advice: practice for interviews, especially for situations where you might be asked unexpected, out-of-the-blue questions. Even if the questions are simple, you could mess up due to pressure.

OPTIONAL TO READ
Being an international student makes this even more challenging. For me, Amazon is one of the very few options(I know outcomes of FAANG can be based a lot on luck and can lead to misery when you put so much grinding into it. But right now I am betting everything on "hope"). Many other companies rejected me because they were seeking candidates with 4+ years of experience for a new grad role.(This was reason for one of rejection I had after an amazing interview). The current job market is tough, I want to get free of this loop and actually work on some of the ideas I have in technology. I’ve learned so much from this community, which is why I decided to write this detailed post—to hopefully help at least one person who is in a situation similar to mine.

Edit 1 : Got the offer from Amazon and accepted it !!

Edit 2 : Detailed preparation
https://www.reddit.com/r/leetcode/comments/1h5d3bc/a_detailed_guide_on_how_i_prepared_for_an/

Find elsewhere
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Glassdoor
glassdoor.com › Interview › Amazon-Cloud-Support-Associate-Interview-Questions-EI_IE6036.0,6_KO7,30.htm
Amazon Cloud Support Associate Interview Experience & Questions | Glassdoor
Good experience in my view. ... Basics of OS, CNS and behavioral question. 3 interview rounds per each topic ... Asking for my spouse: My husband has been with Amazon Prime Video since 2019. He got impacted during the recent layoffs in Oct. He has just received an offer from AWS and needs to respond by 12/26.
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NetCom Learning
netcomlearning.com › blog › aws-interview-questions
90+ AWS Interview Questions and Expert Answers (2026)
March 17, 2026 - Most Asked AWS interview questions and expert answers for freshers to experienced professionals. Master EC2, S3, Lambda & more to crack AWS job interview in one go.
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GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › interview experiences › amazon-interview-experience-for-sde-i-on-campus
Amazon Interview Experience for SDE-I (On-Campus) - GeeksforGeeks
July 23, 2025 - Then the interviewer moved on to a few coding questions after providing me with a live coding link where I had to write my code (just the required functions/classes/structures not the whole code from top to bottom).
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Quora
quora.com › Is-preparing-from-GeeksforGeeks-enough-to-clear-the-Amazon-internship-interview-given-that-I-have-previous-competitive-coding-experience
Is preparing from GeeksforGeeks enough to clear the Amazon internship interview given that I have previous competitive coding experience? - Quora
Answer (1 of 2): It's not really possible to say. because it's a matter of what problems you solve, not what problems you read about. GeeksForGeeks has a lot of basic stuff, but also a lot of advanced material. Which problems from GeeksForGeeks have you been solving, and have you been solving the...
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DataCamp
datacamp.com › blog › top-aws-interview-questions-and-answers
Top 50 AWS Interview Questions and Answers For 2026 | DataCamp
March 21, 2025 - The interviewer wants to see that you have a proactive approach to mastering new technologies, which is essential in the fast-evolving field of cloud computing. Example answer: "When AWS introduces a new service, I start by reviewing the official documentation and release notes to understand its purpose and functionality. I then explore hands-on tutorials and experiment in a sandbox environment for practical experience.
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Medium
nidhiashtikar.medium.com › aws-interview-prep-51-key-questions-and-answers-cc3360b18e34
AWS Interview Prep: 51 Key Questions and Answers | by Nidhi Ashtikar | Medium
June 2, 2025 - AWS Interview Prep: 51 Key Questions and Answers 1. What is AWS? Amazon Web Services (AWS) is a comprehensive and widely adopted cloud platform offering over 200 fully featured services from data …
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InterviewBit
interviewbit.com › aws-interview-questions
Top Important AWS Interview Questions and Answers (2025) - InterviewBit
Check out the most asked AWS Interview Questions for freshers and experienced professionals in top tech companies.
Published   December 20, 2024
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Intellipaat
intellipaat.com › home › blog › top 90+ aws interview questions and answers (2026)
Top 90+ AWS Interview Questions and Answers for 2026
January 8, 2026 - Check out the top 90+ AWS interview questions and answers for freshers & experienced. Read on to learn S3, EC2, Lambda and crack your AWS job role interview.